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Catherine Tamalet

Researcher at Aix-Marseille University

Publications -  197
Citations -  6075

Catherine Tamalet is an academic researcher from Aix-Marseille University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Viral load & Virus. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 196 publications receiving 5746 citations. Previous affiliations of Catherine Tamalet include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & Institut de recherche pour le développement.

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Clinical features and prognostic factors of listeriosis: the MONALISA national prospective cohort study.

Caroline Charlier, +1778 more
TL;DR: Evidence of a significantly reduced survival in patients with neurolisteriosis treated with adjunctive dexamethasone is found, and the time window for fetal losses is determined, which is higher than reported elsewhere.
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Transfusion-associated hepatitis E, France.

TL;DR: The first case in France and the first case worldwide involving a child as blood recipient of HEV recently emerged as a transfusion-transmitted pathogen is described and HEV nucleotide sequences from the blood donor and recipient were identical.
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Natural history of serum HIV-1 RNA levels in 330 patients with a known date of infection

TL;DR: The study extends to the early post-seroconversion phase the prognostic value of extracellular HIV-1 RNA levels and suggests that, in most HIV-infected individuals, a progressive loss of control of viral replication arises during the early years of HIV- 1 infection.
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Cellular and plasma viral load in patients infected with HIV-2

TL;DR: Differences in viral load between individuals infected with HIV-2 and those infected withAIDS could partly account for reported differences in the pathogenicity of the two viruses.
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Neonatal characteristics in rapidly progressive perinatally acquired HIV-1 disease

TL;DR: These prognostic markers, particularly virological parameters, are of value in monitoring children infected by HIV and might serve as a basis for early therapeutic intervention in children born to infected mothers.